January 19-25
This
story originally appeared in Philippine Panorama, August 16, 2012
Thierry
Lewis was at a crossroad. His presentation at a trade exhibit fair in San Diego
was a mess, and his plane leaves home to Paris at six that evening. But he
doesn’t want to leave. “I can stay here
and I may or not may make it,” he thought, “or I can go back and surely I will never make it.”
His mind surging in panic, he
decided to take that one-in-a-lifetime shot at making it big in America. So he
cancelled his flight and went to Silicon Valley. He’s not really sure what to
expect but he was disappointed: There was nothing but suburbs and low office
parks. No sense of arrival. Nothing. Except rain and the falling night.
Much later, he met maverick tech
writer Po Bronson, and his start-up saga joined the prisms in the kaleidoscope The Nudist On The Late Shift and Other True
Stories of Silicon Valley (Random House) which fascinated me so much I read
straight through – that rare book that simultaneously entertains and shares
precious insights.
Thierry rented an office, smelling
like new paint and all six refurbished cublicles still empty, for Quiz Studio,
his software that turns Web pages into interactive quizzes. His desk is empty
except for a laptop and a mobile phone.
“This,” writes Po, “is Silicon Valley
today: Get lean, get stripped down, live on nothing,” but “Get ready for
ultracapitalism.”
Nope, Thierry told him. He’ll just
make $20 million than go home. “I’m not greedy like them. A fitness buff, he
was living on Barilla spaghetti for $1.59. When he gets rich, he’ll upgrade to
De Cecco spaghetti for a budget-draining $2.59. He invites Po to come back
after 3 months for some pasta.
Three months later, “He’s off food
entirely,” writes Po. Thierry has switched to an Apex powdered drink full of
amino acids. He had sent a proposal to all venture capitalists for $2.5
million. That was a strategic mistake. Apparently, they will only finance
projects worth $5 million and up.
His personal fund is running low.
“There’s a knife at my throat,” he says. “Sometimes I get really, really
scared.”
Fast forward. Po writes: “Thierry
told me he had thirty days before he would be selling his clothes.” At the same
time, Thierry had just released the new version of Quiz Studio, which was now
compatible with the Javas of both Sun and Microsoft. He then got to meet with
the executives at Macromedia, Isometrix, Oracle and Knowledge Universe.
Level
playing field.
Ben Chiu was born in Taiwan and grew up in Canada. In search of his roots, he
returned to Taiwan after graduating from college. It seems everybody was
partying all the time so he opened a nightclub. But business in Taiwan, even
discos, is based on guanxi (relationships).
Success is about having the right connections and he grew disillusioned with
that.
He came to Silicon Valley to start a
new life, believing that the Internet will be a level playing field. He wrote
the code himself for his price comparison shopping engine, KillerApp.com,
working 18 hours a day.
Tragically, every venture
capitalists on Sand Hill Road turned him down. He was advised by Broadview
Associates and Morgan Stanley that for his site to be bought, he would need
established venture capitalists like Kleiner Perkins.
But Ben doesn’t know where to start.
“I’ve been through hell,” he says, likening himself to the proverbial mouse on
the wheel as someone cranked up the speed. He came to the United States alone,
not knowing anybody. It took some time for Po to gain his trust because he’s not
use to people caring about his life, only his technology. He eventually, shyly,
showed Po his sketches of wildlife and Po was stunned by his painstaking
attention to detail.
Ben got himself a personal financial
adviser, who turns out to be the accountant for Jerry Yang of Yahoo! and Mark
Andreesen of Netscdape/AOL. “He was Ben’s ticket to guanxi.”
Meanwhile, Ben added music and
consumer electronics – and his start-up doubled in size in a single month.
KillerApp.com was later acquired by C/NET for $46.6 million.
Ben was “overjoyed,” Po shares the
happy news. “He was stressed and giddy at the same time, goofy, apologetic,
sweet – buying me a Pepsi from a vending machine.”
Urban
Legend. Billionaires
don’t impress Po Bronson. When he first met Yahoo! co-founder David Filo, his
first question was, “Do you still sleep under your desk?” There’s a photo (in
the book) with Filo all snuggled up, but that was when he was worth only $500
million.
“Not much anymore,” Filo says, looking
down at the trash heap under his desk. “No room.”
Friends ask Po if he ever thought about starting
a company and making a bundle. What attracts him is not money but access. Only as a “rogue journalist” can
he capture the human energy of Silicon Valley, to record stories of “people in
pursuit of unusual lives” that make his nerves go “Quaannng!”
Just like David Coons. He is a CGI
programmer who’s one of the pioneers of the film-to-digital scanners and an
award-winning inventor of digital ink and print technology, but he says that
the distorted stories about him taking his clothes off at the office have
become urban legend.
“So there’s no truth to it, huh?” asked
Po.
“Oh, no,” Coons says. “It is true."
Entrepreneurial
fire.
Sabeer Bhatia passed the notoriously
brain-blowing transfer exam for Cal Tech. He arrived in Los Angeles on Sept.
23, 1998 all alone. He was just 19 and knew absolutely no one in the United
States. His plan was to get his university and post-graduate degrees then work
in a big company back home in Bangalore.
Something happened in Stanford that
changed his life. The series of inspirational talks given by the likes of Scott
McNealy (Sun Microsystems co-founder) and Steve Wozniak (Apple co-founder) gave
birth to his new can-do attitude and ignited his entrepreneurial fire.
He and his best friend Jack Smith worked
at Apple after graduation. His proud parents said their super-smart son is now
with a very famous company in America – he’ll have job security! In the
meantime, Bhatia would tantalize Smith everyday about stories about some dude
selling his start-up for millions.
“Jack, what are we doing here, wasting
our lives?” and “Jack, given the enormous opportunities here, if we can’t make
it here, than we are complete failures!”
Sabeer shopped around for his Web-based
personal database, JavaSoft, while measuring the characters of prospective
investors. If he feels he can trust them, he’ll show his ace. He and Jack were
always brainstorming, exchanging ideas throgh their corporate e-mail, but afraid
somebody night catch them doing personal projects during work hours.
Then an came an idea so simple it them
like a tuck – free Web-based e-mail accounts.
Sabeer and Jack are rank-and-file
hardware engineers. They don’t have any experience or background in business or
management; they’re not even techies. They’re just cubicle worker bees – but
they have an idea.
Sabeer has “hallucinogenic optimism,”
recalls Steve Jurvetson of venture capitalist firm Draper Fisher Jurvetson. “He
had an unquestionable sense of destiny. But he was right. He grew the
subscriber base faster than any company in the history of the world.
The popularity of Sabeer’s brainchild,
Hotmail, introduced the concept of “viral marketing.” When Microsoft descended,
they already have a walloping six million users.
“You’re crazy!” said Microsoft negotiators.
But Sabeer showed an “Off-the-charts degree of confidence,” writes Po.
Everybody, as in everybody, was
shocked when the deal closed.
Free e-mail for $400 million.
Only in America.
Only in Silicon Valley
17 comments:
Gary V - Sayaweh http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Auni6HeWb-o
UAAP 73 opening - Gary Valenciano http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DJsVrg2sc4A
A full body workout is better than sex. Just joking! But what a feeling!
"I've seen fire
and I've seen rain,
I've seen sunny days
that I thought
would never end…”
“… I've seen lonely times
when I could not find a friend,
but I always thought
that I'll see you again..."
~James Taylor
Fire and Rain
http://jonathan2rivers.blogspot.com/2011/02/my-favorite-james-taylor-songs.html
Albert Einstein's rightful place in history is deeply embedded like Mount Everest. His towering intellect has revolutionized modern science and broadened and deepened our understanding of the mysterious laws of the universe
Carl Jung, with his revolutionary insights and formidable intellect, had dedicated his life in finding that elusive, primordial link between the individual and the collective consciousness of humanity. His revolutionary insights has become the template in the development of modern psychology
:)
"Nobody said
that life is always fair,
sometimes it clips your wings
when you're on mid-air,
but there's a thread
between your life and mine,
and when you're losing hope,
this rope won't unwind..."
~Rupert Holmes
Touch and Go
http://jonathan2rivers.blogspot.com/2010/03/my-favorite-rupert-holmes-song.html
:)
Noong ika-22 ng Enero, grabe ang sakit ng likod ko. Tanga-tanga kasi: nagbuhat ng weights na walang warm-up. Buti na lang, yung anak ng landlady ko marunong mag-hilot.
Ayos na, pero wag daw akong maligo nung araw na yun.
Noong nakaraang Sabado, nagpatanggal ako ng warts. Sabi ng dermatologist, wag na daw me maligo, kinabukasan na lang.
Kaya sa loob lang ng isang linggo, dalawang beses akong hindi nakaligo.
Kaya mas gwapo sa akin si Captain Barbell
Hi theге, I enϳoу reаding through your article.
I liκe to write a little cοmment to suρport уou.
Here is my site :: twink cam
"...That was Charles Xavier’s first class: a group of young people with amazing capabilities, who need someone to teach them to accept who they are, harness their powers and use them for the greater good..."
~Huggybear
What Have We Learned From Hollywood Blockbusters
:)
This Huggybear story originally appeared August 21,2011 in Philippine Panorama, the Sunday magazine of the Manila Bulletin
Thor
X-Men: First Class
Pirates of The Caribbean: On Stranger Tides
Green Lantern
Harry Potter and The Deathly Hollows
http://jonathan2rivers.blogspot.com/2011/09/september-10-to-16.html
"...Facing a formidable enemy, Charles and Erik sought other mutants to foil Shaw’s ultimate objective of triggering a nuclear holocaust and creating a new world order in the aftermath..."
http://translate.google.com/?tl=id#auto/id/book%20publishers
"Ako'y alipin mo
kahit hindi batid,
aaminin ko
minsan ako'y manhid,
sana at iyong naririnig,
sa iyong yakap
ako'y nasasabik..."
:)
"... Pagka't ikaw lang
ang nais makatabi,
malamig man o mainit ang gabi,
nais ko sana..."
~Shamrock
Alipin
http://jonathan2rivers.blogspot.com/2011/04/my-favorite-shamrock-tagalog-songs.html
"Of all the things
I've ever done,
finding you will prove to be
the most important one..."
Post a Comment